The intention is to reduce annoying differences between mpv CLI and
libmpv, and there's no reason to have the locale check only in libmpv
(although it doesn't help with any real issues either).
the first mouse events, that try to hide the title bar, could happen
before the title bar was actually initialised. that caused our hiding
code to access a nil value. check for an available title bar before
trying to hide it.
there were actually a few small problems. the fatalError() function
wasn't supposed to be called there and caused an "Illegal instruction".
this was replaced by a print and exit() call. the second problem was
that cocoa returns a kCGLBadPixelFormat instead of a kCGLBadAttribute
error, which broke our check, immediately exited our loop and no working
pixel format was ever created. the third problem was that macOS 10.12
didn't return any errors but also didn't return a pixel format, that
also broke our check. now the code checks for both cases.
Fixes#5631
when we transitioned to the new libmpv API with commit ae29725 i
reintroduced an old bug that was fixed with 7f714c6 because of a dumb
rebasing error on my part. the branch i based the libmpv changed on was
originally without the fbo fix and on rebasing i forgot to change the
variable to the proper one, basically deactivating the fix.
mouse events and the tracking area are needed for (un)hiding the new
title bar, which was broken when input-cursor=no was set. no tracking
area was ever created and set which completely deactivated any mouse
events. the specific mouse event functions were already deactivated
proactively and have the needed check. no events are being propagated to
the mpv core when input-cursor=no is set, even with an active tracking
area.
Overall, just shuffled code around and added a few debugging messages
for future issues.
The issue could be reproduced easily by quickly navigating through the
playlist inside a network mount.
Closes#5618
The s_size() function, whatever it was supposed to do, caused the
surface size to increase indefinitely. Fix by making it always use the
maximum size that was last used, which is less optimal (many surface
recreations when making the window slowly larger), but at least it
works.
The rotation code didn't mark the old surface as invalid when it was
freed, so it could destroy random other surfaces (let's call it dangling
ID).
Also, the required rotation surface size depends on the rotation mode,
so recreate the surfaces on rotation as well.
If you set desired.samples to 0, SDL will return a default buffer size
on obtained.samples. This was broken, because ceil_power_of_two(0)
returns 1. Since 0 is usually not considered a power of two, this is
probably correct, but we still want to set desired.samples to 0 in this
case.
You can use --audio-buffer=0 to minimize the audio buffer size. But if
the AO reports no device buffer size (like e.g. ao_jack does), then the
buffer size is actually 0, and playback can never work properly.
Make it fallback to a size of 1, which is unlikely to work properly, but
you get what you asked for, instead of a freeze.
Since the demuxer cache addition, ds->queue->head can actually be set to
non-NULL, but the decoder can still be at EOF (with no packets to come).
This made it report an unknown buffered size, instead of 0. Fix this by
checking the decoder part of the packet queue instead.
Probably doesn't matter much, but fixes an annoying "???" on the CLI
status line in some situations.
there were several problems that had to be fixed because of differences
between python2 to python3:
- subprocess.check_output returned an unicode instead of a string
- filter() returns an iterator instead of a list
- recursion limit was reached
first two were fixed by explicitly converting to the needed type or
using the proper function invocation. third was fixed by changing the
recursive process_libraries function to an iterative one.
Fixes#5600, #3316
While the soft buffer size is already by default 200ms, it is not enough to guarantee dropout-free playback on Bluetooth audio. Bumping the device buffer size to the same value seems to suffice.
We use triple buffering for this interop and we were only unreffing the
data structures, which doesn't destroy the drm buffers.
This patch allows to make sure that we release the drm buffers on
playback end.
we activated the rendering loop a bit too early and it was possible that
the first draw function was called before it was actually ready. this
was a remnant from the old init routine and should have been changed.
start the queue on reconfigure instead of preinit.
on a file change and when the aspect ratio of the window changed, the
first live resize state had a wrong aspect ratio because the new aspect
ratio was only set after the first resize. just set the new content
frame before the resize.
i tried being smart and handle aspect ratio differences manually via
atomic drawing and resizing to aspect fitted frames. there were a few
issues with that. like unexpected visibility of certain System GUI
elements on entering fullscreen or visually dropped frames due to the
atomic drawing. now we rely on system mechanics to keep the proper
aspect ratio of our layer, the recommended way. as a side effect it also
fixes a segfault.
Fixes#5581
It turns out that Mali drivers are likely broken, and do not return
GBM_FORMAT_ARGB8888 (they return GBM_FORMAT_XRGB8888) when getting
EGL_NATIVE_VISUAL_ID for any EGLConfig, even though the resulting
EGLConfig appears to be capable of alpha.
It could also be potentially useful to allow an ARGB EGLConfig used
with an XRGB framebuffer on some platforms, so we do that. (cf. weston)
Unrelated indentation fix in gbm_format_to_string.
Naturally, there's more than one fourcc that indicates an mjpeg
stream.
I have a particular ancient webcam here (Logitech QuickCam Messanger)
that only supports the single 'JPEG' format, but there are other
devices out there which support both 'JPEG' and 'MJPG' with no visible
differences, and others where the streams are slightly different.
Regardless of those details, it remains correct to treat 'JPEG'
the same as 'MJPG' from a stream consumption perspective.
This adds key bindings for some semi-popular features. It also tries to
cleanup some old bindings. For example w/e for panscan is now changed to
w/W. In all cases, the old bindings are still kept and work, though.
Part of an ongoing attempt to cleanup the default key bindings.
See #973 for some context.
this API was introduced in c5e4538 solely for the use with cocoa-cb and
was not public. with the port to the new API in 760d471 it is now unused
and can safely be removed.
it's possible to get a function pointer through a closure after all in
swift. remove the GL dummy function from the c header and do it in the
swift code instead.
After switching, the playback state was not reset, which could leave it
in a strange, pause like state, that could be fixed by e.g. seeking.
This seems to be an older regression - it's even in 0.27.
Sometimes, playback needs to be fully uninitialized and reinitialized
without "officially" closing and reopening the playlist entry. This
happens with PT_RELOAD_FILE, which is triggered by edition switching and
also DVD/BD title switching. (Not really sure why it goes through so
much pain for such obscure cases. All it gains is not resetting "local"
options, and not signaling a reload to the client API. Whatever.)
The recent filter change freed filter_root too early without recreating
it, so it crashed on edition switching.
Fixes#5587.
If you used --aufio-file=file.mkv, and file.mkv included a video track
marked as default, then the logic in select_default_track() would pick
the video track from file.mkv. This is 100% broken, so fix it.
The playback start logic explicitly waits until the first frame has been
displayed. Usually this will introduce a wait of 1 vsync. For normal
playback this doesn't matter, but with respect to low latency needs,
this only leads to additional data getting queued up in the demuxer or
network buffers.
Another thing is that the timing logic decodes 1 frame ahead (= 1 frame
extra latency) to determine the exact duration of a frame.
To be fair, there doesn't really seem to be a hard reason why this is
needed. With the current code, enabling the option does lead to A/V
desync sometimes (if the demuxer FPS is too inaccurate), and also frame
drops at playback start in some situations. But this all seems to be
avoidable, if the timing logic were to be rewritten completely, which
should probably happen in the future. Thus the new option comes with the
warning that it can be removed any time. This is also why the option has
"hack" in the name.
Well I guess it doesn't help that much.
Also add some stuff that might help to the manpage.
The fundamental problem with some "live" sources (e.g. x11grab) is
actually that the player gets behind initially, and never thinks it has
to catch up. This is also why --untimed can help.
It's a mess: mp3 files have user tags as global metadata (because the
id3v2 tag is global and there is only 1 stream), while OGG files have it
per-track (because it's per-stream on the lowest level). mpv needs to
try to make something nice out of the mess.
It did so by trying to detect audio-only OGG files, and then copying the
per-stream metadata to the global metadata. Make the heuristic for
detecting this slightly more clever, so it works for files with extra,
unrelated streams, like the awful libavformat cover art hack.
Fixes#5577.